 Today we had a fascinating discussion as we looked ahead at the specific role that we can play in helping people understand a lot more about global health. In our discussions are a diverse group of people coming from academia, coming from the private sector, coming from the corporate world, coming from the non-governmental organization community, from the domestic and global realms. And when you put together that degree of diversity in putting together a platform, you know that it's going to be innovative, it's going to be creative, it's going to maybe look at things in a little bit different light than anybody else has. And that's, to me, the real challenge that we have, but it's also the real excitement in having a commission like this. We've made huge progress in the prevention and treatment and care of individuals with HIV, huge progress. So we need to maintain that, but we also need to expand it to malaria, to tuberculosis, to other emerging diseases, to the diseases that most people have forgotten. And that's our biggest challenge today, is to communicate why it does matter. When you say that there are 15,000 kids who are going to die, deaths that can be prevented by inexpensive means that are cheap, that are proven, that have been demonstrated. Even that person would basically say, here's my dollar. As a human being, as part of this oneness of humanity, it's the right thing for me to do, no matter what my station is in life, to be able to reach out and in this sort of integrated fabric of humanity to lift other people up if I can. So our responsibility with this commission is to demonstrate how you can make that difference. That dollar that you give me will get to that life on the ground and make that life more productive, healthier, and a happier life. And if we can demonstrate that, I guarantee that people will continue to invest.